The US based reporter who claims to have reviewed games, tech, fashion and travel for major news outlets including CBS, AXS, Yahoo and The Examiner, posted the tweet to his 59,000 followers shortly after the attack.

‘MULTIPLE CONFIRMED FATALITIES at Manchester Arena. The last time I listened to Ariana Grande I almost died too,’ he wrote on Twitter.

At the time of writing, the tweet has been replied to more than 24,000 times, with most voicing disgust over the arguably inappropriate tweet.

So much for trying to make light of a tragedy that fell way short of the mark. Or perhaps just showing how insensitive journalists can actually be, Leavitt decided to have another go.

Commentators by now were after Leavitt’s blood, with many quick to point out the reporter’s obvious lack of sincerity and his failure to delete the original tweet.

Eventually David Leavitt got the drift and deleted the tweet but not before almost certainly putting himself in the shit list with potential employers or readers (can someone say Milo Yianopoulos three times without gulping) who are well advised to stay clear of Leavitt until he learns some humility and comes to terms with the severity of the tragic loss of life and terror directed at children. Something no journalist or pundit or provocateur should consider an opportunity to show off their wits, smugness or utter callousness…

And for those wondering how long Dave’s career in journalism might just end up lasting here was a tweet courtesy of Boston affiliate of CBS who as of Monday evening distanced themselves from Leavitt saying, ‘David Leavitt is not a WBZ employee. His abhorrent comments in no way represent the views of our station.’

But there’s more: Via Kotaku: ‘He admitted to CJR, however, that he makes much of his money from sponsored Instagram posts and tweets. “These days,” he said, “I find that I’m getting paid more for a sponsored tweet or Instagram post that takes less than a minute, than I do for actual journalism.”